Sunday, March 24, 2013

SEPTEMBER 26, 1942 - STATEMENT OF REVERENT WILLIAM TEMPLE, ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY, CALLING FOR THE NATIONALIZATION OF THE BANK OF ENGLAND

1942 - STATEMENT OF REVERENT WILLIAM TEMPLE,
ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY, CALLING FOR THE NATIONALIZATION OF THE BANK OF
ENGLAND
“The private issue of new credit should be regarded in the modern world in just
the same way in which the private minting of money was regarded in earlier
times. The banks should be limited in their lending power to the amount
deposited by their clients, while the issue of newer credit should be the
function of public authority. This is not in any way to censure the banks or
bankers...But the system has become anomalous, and, so often happens when
anomaly has persisted through a long period of time, the result is to make into
the master what ought to be the servant.”
Temple’s
advocacy for banks being “limited in their lending power to the amount
deposited by their clients” was for the ending of “fractional reserve banking”
– the common practice of financial institutions providing loans in amounts many
times in excess of the actual amount held by them. This feature is one of the
major components of HR 2990, The National Emergency Employment Defense Act.